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Breathe Easy
It might be
possible to cure allergy, not just suppress it
researchers are nowadays taking a different
approach to treating allergies. They are focusing on the interplay
between the bodys immunity and the development of an
allergy. A drug can at the most suppress allergy every time
it happens but delving deeper into what causes it might help
get rid of the affliction forever.
An allergy is caused when the body reacts
to a foreign substance. Although this is usually not more
than coughs, rashes or fever, there are times it can get out
of control. This leads to an anaphylactic shock, characterized
by a sudden dip in blood pressure and acute difficulty in
breathing. Commonly used things like peanuts and penicillin
can trigger the reaction. Scientists have traced anaphylactic
shock to a protein called interleukin-33 (IL-33).
Earlier studies have found IL-33 to regulate
immunity by increasing the levels of antibodies. Peter Pushparaj,
at the division of immunology, infection and inflammation,
University of Glasgow, Scotland, and other researchers took
tissue samples of patients suffering from anaphylactic shock
and of healthy people. They found very high levels of IL-33
in skin samples of people with allergy-induced rashes; the
protein was absent in healthy skin.
The authors say they still cant say whether the allergy-induced
shock stimulates IL-33 production, or IL-33 itself causes
the allergic reaction which leads to the shock.
The study was published in the June 16
issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
Now that we know the role of IL-33,
we can block either its production, or its receptors,
said Narinder Kumar Mehra, head of the department of transplant
immunology and immunogenetics, All India Institute of Medical
Sciences, Delhi. Researching into how a disease develops
because of the bodys immune system will make it easier
to target a drug, and treat anaphylactic shock.
Source: Down
To Earth, August 2009

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